RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
AIR FORCE BOARD FOR CORRECTION OF MILITARY RECORDS
IN THE MATTER OF: DOCKET NUMBER: 96-02277
INDEX NUMBER: 131.00, 131.10
111.01, 107.00
COUNSEL: NONE
HEARING DESIRED: NO
___________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT REQUESTS THAT:
1. He be given retroactive promotion to the grade of lieutenant
colonel by the Calendar Year (CY) 1993A Central Lt Col Selection
Board.
2. The Officer Selection Brief (OSB) reviewed by the CY93A Lt Col
Board be corrected to reflect three Meritorious Service Medals (MSMs)
and his duty position as Chief, Management and Requirements Branch, HQ
PACAF.
3. The Officer Performance Report (OPR) closing 12 August 1993 be
removed from his record and a reaccomplished OPR be substituted in its
place, even if the Board grants him retroactive promotion.
If his request for retroactive promotion is denied and the Board
directs consideration for promotion by Special Selection Board (SSB),
applicant also requests that:
4. The PME for Air Command and Staff College (ACSC) be masked on all
of the benchmark records when meeting the SSBs; and if PME for ACSC is
not masked, request a letter be placed in his promotion folder when
meeting the SSBs stating he was in the process of completing ACSC, and
had not yet completed it due to circumstances beyond his control.
5. He be provided consideration for promotion by SSB for both the
CY93A and CY94A Lt Col Boards.
6. Prior to the SSBs, he be given 60 days in which to procure new
Promotion Recommendation Forms (PRFs) from his senior raters for both
the CY93A and CY94A Lt Col Boards.
7. He be given a slot to attend Senior Service School (SSS) in
residence and that a letter be placed in his promotion folder stating
he was unable to complete SSS due to circumstances beyond his control.
8. A directive be issued by the AFBCMR (when and if promoted to Lt
Col) upon his return to active duty to include a two or three-year
period of time prior to becoming eligible for in-the-promotion-zone
(IPZ) consideration for the grade of colonel.
By letter, dated 5 November 1996, applicant amended his application to
include the following requests that (Exhibit A1):
1. His nonselections for promotion to the grade of lieutenant colonel
be declared null and void.
2. The PRFs he received for the CY93A and CY94A Lt Colonel Boards be
upgraded to “Definitely Promote” recommendations.
3. His records be corrected to reflect promotion to the grade of
lieutenant colonel as if selected by the CY93A Lt Colonel Board.
4. The Board reinstate him to active duty and correct his record to
reflect continuous active duty (with all pay, rights, benefits, and
other entitlements) until he can be considered by selections boards
conducted squarely according to the requirements of statute and
directive.
___________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT CONTENDS THAT:
He was returned to active duty on 25 October 1992. For two years and
three months he had no evaluation reports on his duty performance
since he was a civilian. During that time he lost the possibility of
up to four new OPRs. Instead, he only had one OPR written before he
met the CY93A Lt Col Board. The officers he was compared against at
the Lt Col board had five or six reports instead of his three. (Tab
2)
In light of what he has been through, a direct promotion to the grade
of lieutenant colonel is the right thing to do. He does not believe
an SSB can fairly and justly evaluate him for promotion to lieutenant
colonel. With the missing evaluations between 11 April 1990 and 12
August 1993, it would be very difficult, at best, for an SSB to fairly
assess his promotion potential when comparing him to the benchmark
records of his peers. (Tab 2)
Although the citation for the MSM (2OLC) may have been in his
selection folder, the OSB for the CY93A board did not reflect the
correct number of awarded MSMs, three. Additionally, the OSB did not
indicate his duty title of Chief, Management and Requirements Branch,
HQ PACAF (Lt Col billet). Due to administrative oversight, the AF
Form 2096 was not prepared in time to reach his records and thus, was
not reflected on the OSB. The inaccuracy of the OSB could have
adversely impacted the board’s evaluation. (Tab 3)
As explained by the rater, indorser, and senior rater, the OPR closing
12 August 1993 did not include significant facts which would have had
a strong influence on his record of performance. The contested report
did not include significant accomplishments while stationed at Osan
AB, Korea. The reaccomplished OPR truly depicts those accomplishments
that were left out in the original OPR. (Tab 4)
Following his return to active duty, he had less than 11 months to
complete PME (ACSC) which is crucial for promotion to lieutenant
colonel. On the average, a major is given approximately four years to
complete ACSC from the time he gets his line number to major to the
time he meets his primary lieutenant colonel board. (Tab 5)
Applicant’s complete statement and documentary evidence submitted in
support of his application are included as Exhibit A, with 10 Tabs.
(Amended request)
The selection boards which considered him for promotion violated the
minimum due process requirements of law and directive. Air Force
procedures ignored the Department of Defense (DOD) directive
requirement for separate boards and separate board reports were not
issued. The operation of the selection boards failed to comply with
Sections 616 and 617. In addition, the board president’s role was
contrary to directive and Congressional intent. As the results of the
illegally conducted selection boards are without effect, his
nonselections should be set aside.
Additionally, the flaws of the original boards, coupled with an
arbitrary and capricious scoring system of SSBs and the inability to
recreate his record deny SSBs the opportunity to provide him ‘fair and
equitable’ reconsideration or ‘full and fitting relief.’ As his
active service “cannot be terminated...unless [I had been considered
by boards conducted] as required by statute and regulation” (see
Doyle), he is entitled to reinstatement until those requirements of
law can be met. He also requests his record be corrected to reflect
selection for lieutenant colonel as any SSB will not be able view a
complete record of his performance and other credentials (notably PME)
as he was denied the opportunity to build that performance record and
complete the career enhancing courses due solely to his first illegal
separation.
In his amendment, applicant provided his 19-page expanded statement
concerning defective selection boards and a document entitled
“Evidentiary Support: Illegal Selection Boards.” (Exhibit A1).
___________________________________________________________________
STATEMENT OF FACTS:
On 4 August 1978, applicant was appointed as second lieutenant, Air
Force Reserve. He was voluntarily ordered to extended active duty on
11 December 1978. He served on continuous active, was integrated into
the Regular component on 21 March 1985, and progressively promoted to
the grade of captain. As a result of his nonselection for promotion
to the grade of major by the CY88 and CY89 Central Major Selection
Boards, he was involuntarily separated from active duty on 31 July
1990.
On 22 May 1991, the AFBCMR favorably considered applicant’s request
that the OER rendered for the period 1 June 1985 through 31 May 1986
be declared void and removed from his records. The Board further
recommended that he be considered for promotion by SSB for the CY88
and CY89 Central Major Boards and that he be allowed 60 days to secure
a new Promotion Recommendation Form (PRF) from the senior rater for
the CY89 Central Major Board.
The applicant was selected for retroactive promotion by SSB for the
CY88 Central Major Board. As a result of his selection for promotion
to the grade of major, the AFBCMR further recommended approval of his
request to be reinstated to active duty. The applicant was reinstated
to active duty on 25 October 1992, in the grade of major, with a date
of rank of 1 October 1989.
On 22 April 1993, the AFBCMR favorably considered applicant’s request
that he be considered for Intermediate Service School (ISS) candidacy,
under the coupled system, by SSB for the CY88 Central Major Board.
The Board further recommended that if he was identified as an ISS
candidate, a letter be placed in his records indicating he was
selected for ISS but unable to attend based on operational reasons.
The SSB convened on 15 November 1993, and determined that the
applicant would not have been selected for ISS candidacy by the
original board.
Applicant was awarded the MSM (2OLC) for outstanding noncombat
meritorious service during the period 29 October 1992-1 October 1993,
per Special Order GB-001, dated 15 October 1993.
He was considered and not selected for promotion to the grade of
lieutenant colonel by the CY93A and CY94A Lt Colonel Boards. The MSM
(2OLC) was not reflected on the OSB reviewed by the CY93A Lt Col Board
which convened on 12 October 1993. It was reflected on the OSB
reviewed by the CY94A Lt Col Board which convened on 11 October 1994.
A resume of applicant’s OERs/OPRs subsequent to his promotion to
captain follows:
PERIOD CLOSING OVERALL EVALUATION
25 Jun 83 1-X-1
31 May 84 1-1-X
31 May 85 1-1-1
31 May 86 Removed by Order of SAF
31 May 87 1-1-1
11 Apr 88 1-1-1
11 Apr 89 Meets Standards (MS)
11 Apr 90 MS
12 Apr 90 - 24 Oct 92 - No report available. Member
restored to active duty by
Direction
of SAF under AFR 31-3, AFBCMR.
* 12 Aug 93 MS
# 14 Jun 94 MS
12 May 95 MS
* - Contested report. Top report in file when considered and not
selected for promotion by the CY93A Central Lt Col Board.
# - Top report in file when considered and not selected for promotion
by the CY94A Central Lt Col Board.
The OSB reviewed by the CY94A Lt Col Board reflects the duty title
“Chief, Management and Requirements Section,” with an effective date
of 27 September 1993; and the duty title “Chief, Management and
Requirements Branch,” with an effective date of 25 February 1994.
As a result of his second nonselection for promotion to the grade of
lieutenant colonel, the applicant was required to separate no later
than 31 May 1995. He selected early retirement and retired from
active duty on 30 June 1995. He was credited with 16 years, 6 months,
and 20 days of active service for retirement.
___________________________________________________________________
AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
The Senior Service School Assignments Section, AFPC/DPAJE, stated it
would be inappropriate to mask PME on benchmarked records if
applicant’s record meets an SSB, as it was not masked for officers
meeting the original board and it would be an injustice to other “non-
promotes” from that board, as well as an inequity to those who were
not selected as school candidates (both possibly based upon the fact
they did not have PME completed.) A letter in the promotion folder
would also be inappropriate, as his situation is not unlike numerous
other individuals completing ACSC. A letter of this nature would not
be equitable to those other people who met the same board and had not
completed ACSC and were possibly deferred as a result.
If applicant would be selected to lieutenant colonel by an SSB, at
that time his record would be scored against “benchmark” records and
he would receive school candidacy if appropriate. If selected for
lieutenant colonel, whether receiving candidacy status or not, he
would be afforded the opportunity to compete for and attend senior
service school.
The complete evaluation is at Exhibit C.
The Appeals and SSB Branch, AFPC/DPPPA, reviewed this application and
recommended denial due to lack of merit. Their comments, in part,
follow.
Regarding applicant’s request that the OPR closing 12 August 1993 be
replaced with a reaccomplished report, DPPPA stated that nowhere in
the letters of support from the members of the rating chain is it
stated specifically what is erroneous in the original report. Any
report can be rewritten to be more eloquent and hard-hitting. When
the rating chain signed the original report in 1993, they were
ensuring it was complete and accurate.
DPPPA stated applicant’s request to have the MSM (2OLC) reflected on
the OSB for the CY93A board is unfounded. The decoration was awarded
by special order on 15 October 1993. Until the special order is
accomplished, a decoration does not exist. The CY93A board convened
on 12 October 1993, at which time the decoration was not approved.
The award was not required to be filed in the applicant’s selection
folder until 14 December 1993, well after the contested board.
The duty title requested by the applicant on his CY93A OSB, is not
supported by appropriate documentation. The AF Form 2095 included in
his appeal package is unofficial and invalid. It was not processed
through the appropriate channels, as indicated by the blank row of
coordination blocks in Section VIII, and was, therefore, not awarded.
The requested duty title does appear on the OSB for the CY94A board,
with an effective date of 25 Feb 94. The applicant has not provided
evidence that he was serving in the capacity of a branch chief or that
the duty title was ever awarded to him prior to the CY93A board.
The applicant’s request to have the PME information on the sampling of
records from the original board masked should he be awarded an SSB is
without foundation. This request is in direct violation of equitable
consideration for all officers. While he states he was placed at a
disadvantage regarding the time he had to complete PME, DPPPA was not
convinced by his statements. Upon reviewing the letters from his
supervisor regarding the applicant’s PME, it is apparent that his two-
time failure to pass the Block I PME examination was a more likely
reason for the absence of PME in his record. Each failure caused a
delay in the applicant’s ability to immediately resume PME, and likely
resulted in his inability to complete PME prior to the CY93A Board.
In the absence of changes in the records of performance or
impropriety, reaccomplished PRFs are not warranted. Furthermore, no
support is provided from the applicant’s senior rater on either of the
PRFs, nor from the Management Level Evaluation Board (MLEB) president.
This support is required to substantiate a PRF appeal.
Noting applicant’s request for direct promotion, DPPPA stated he has
failed to prove that his situation was unfailingly unique or that he
has been treated unfairly in the promotion process.
The complete evaluation is at Exhibit D.
The Chief, Selection Board Secretariat, AFPC/DPPB, provided comments
addressing applicant’s allegations pertaining to “Defective Selection
Boards.” DPPB disagreed with applicant’s contention that his
promotion boards were in violation of Sections 616 and 617, 10 USC.
Air Force legal representatives have reviewed their procedures on
several occasions during the past few years and have determined those
procedures comply with applicable statute and policy.
All Air Force promotion boards comply with DODD 1320.12. The
actions/responsibilities of each board president are in compliance
with governing directives.
DPPB disagreed with applicant’s contention that the Air Force neither
developed nor issued standard operating procedures for selection
boards. Upon the approval and publishing of DODD 1320.12, 4 Feb 92,
all Air Force promotion boards were placed on hold pending a complete
rewrite of AFR 36-89, Promotion of Active Duty List Officers
(subsequently superseded by AFI 36-2501). Only after the new AFR was
approved by the Office of the Secretary of Defense and published 17
Apr 92, did they resume promotion boards.
DPPB disagreed with applicant’s contention that an SSB cannot provide
a full measure of relief since the benchmark records used for an SSB
are a tainted record sampling. The identification of benchmark
records from each selection board is in compliance with governing
directives.
The complete evaluation is at Exhibit E.
The Senior Attorney-Advisor, AFPC/JA, reviewed applicant’s original
application (Exhibit A) and discerned no legal issues. He reviewed
the “additional material” submitted with the applicant’s letter of
5 November 1996 (Exhibit A1) and provided comments addressing the
applicant’s arguments that the promotion board procedures violate both
statute and DOD Directive, the role of the board president violates
DOD Directive, and that his nonselection for promotion cannot be
remedied by SSB consideration. JA stated that the applicant has
failed to present relevant evidence proving the existence of any error
or injustice prejudicial to his substantial rights with respect to the
promotion recommendation and promotions processes that considered him.
On that basis, they recommended that the application be denied.
(Exhibit F)
___________________________________________________________________
APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF AIR FORCE EVALUATION:
Applicant disagreed with the advisory opinions and asks that the Board
dismiss the opinions as unsupported, conclusory statements designed to
deceive and to obfuscate the facts in this matter. He provided his
expanded comments addressing the specific issues of his appeal.
In further support of his request, he provided a statement from the
NCO of the Information Management Section, and additional statements
from the rater and reviewer on the OPR closing 12 August 1993, and the
rater on the OPR closing 14 June 1994.
Applicant’s 34-page statement, with attachments, is at Exhibit H.
___________________________________________________________________
THE BOARD CONCLUDES THAT:
1. The applicant has exhausted all remedies provided by existing law
or regulations.
2. The application was timely filed.
3. Insufficient relevant evidence has been presented to demonstrate
the existence of probable error or injustice warranting corrective
action.
a. Applicant’s contentions that the Officer Selection Brief
(OSB) reviewed by the CY93A Central Lieutenant Colonel Selection Board
did not reflect the correct number of awarded Meritorious Service
Medals (MSMs) and did not reflect his duty title of Chief, Management
and Requirements Branch are duly noted. However, by regulation, the
MSM (Second Oak Leaf Cluster (2OLC)) awarded by special order dated
15 October 1993 was not required to be filed in the applicant’s
records until 60 days after the date of the order. Therefore, it was
not required to be filed in his record and reflected on the OSB
reviewed by the CY93A Lt Colonel Board which convened on 12 October
1993. Convening dates of selection boards are widely publicized.
Therefore, it was incumbent upon the members of the applicant’s rating
chain to follow the processing of the award and insure that it reached
his selection folder prior to the convening of the promotion board, if
they desired it to be considered. This was especially critical since
the closeout date of the award was so close to the promotion board
convening date. A review of the evidence provided did not persuade us
that any attempt was made by either the applicant or the members of
his rating chain to insure that the MSM(2OLC) was included in the
applicant’s selection folder for consideration by the selection board.
In addition, we are not convinced by the evidence provided that the
applicant had been officially awarded the duty title of “Chief,
Management and Requirements Branch” prior to the CY93A Board. In view
of the foregoing, and absent evidence to the contrary, we find no
basis to favorably consider the applicant’s request to change the OSB
reviewed by the CY93A Lt Col Board.
b. Applicant contends that the OPR closing 12 August 1993 did
not include significant facts which would have had a strong influence
on his record of performance. However, after reviewing the evidence
provided, including the supporting statements from the evaluators on
the contested report, we are not persuaded that the report is an
inaccurate or unjust assessment of the applicant’s performance as
rendered, only that it could have been written differently to include
additional accomplishments. Therefore, in the absence of persuasive
evidence that the evaluators were precluded from rendering an unbiased
assessment of the applicant’s duty performance, we find no compelling
basis to favorably consider the applicant’s request to remove the
contested report from his record and substitute the reaccomplished
report in its place.
4. After careful consideration of the evidence provided, we found no
evidence that the applicant’s records were improperly constituted when
he was considered for promotion by the CY93A Lt Colonel Board. In
addition, we have seen no evidence which would lead us to believe that
his records were so inaccurate or misleading that the members of the
duly constituted selection boards, both the CY93A and the CY94A Lt
Colonel Boards, applying the complete promotion criteria, were
precluded from rendering a reasonable decision concerning his
promotability in comparison to his peers. In view of the foregoing,
and in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we find no compelling
basis to recommend favorable consideration on the applicant’s request
for direct promotion to the grade of lieutenant colonel or his
alternate request for consideration for promotion by Special Selection
Board.
5. The applicant’s numerous assertions concerning the statutory and
regulatory compliance of central selections boards, the legality of
the promotion recommendation process, and the legality of the Special
Selection Board (SSB) process, are duly noted. However, we do not
find these assertions, in and of themselves, sufficiently persuasive
to override the rationale provided by the respective Air Force
offices. Therefore, we agree with the recommendations of the
appropriate Air Force offices and adopt the rationale expressed as the
basis of our decision that the applicant has failed to sustain his
burden of establishing that he has suffered either an error or an
injustice.
___________________________________________________________________
THE BOARD DETERMINES THAT:
The applicant be notified that the evidence presented did not
demonstrate the existence of probable material error or injustice;
that the application was denied without a personal appearance; and
that the application will only be reconsidered upon the submission of
newly discovered relevant evidence not considered with this
application.
___________________________________________________________________
The following members of the Board considered this application in
Executive Session on 22 June 1999, under the provisions of AFI 36-
2603:
Mr. Thomas S. Markiewicz, Panel Chair
Mr. Timothy A. Beyland, Member
Mr. Joseph G. Diamond, Member
The following documentary evidence was considered:
Exhibit A. DD Form 149, dated 5 Aug 96, w/atchs.
Exhibit A1. Letter from Applicant, dated 5 Nov 96, w/atchs.
Exhibit B. Applicant's Master Personnel Records.
Exhibit C. Letter, AFPC/DPAJE, dated 12 Oct 96.
Exhibit D. Letter, AFPC/DPPPA, dated 12 Nov 96.
Exhibit E. Letter, AFPC/DPPB, dated 13 Dec 96.
Exhibit F. Letter, AFPC/JA, dated 7 Mar 97.
Exhibit G. Letters, SAF/MIBR, dated 31 Mar 97 and
3 Apr 97.
Exhibit H. Letter from Applicant, dated 28 May 97, w/atchs.
THOMAS S. MARKIEWICZ
Panel Chair
If his request for retroactive promotion is denied and the Board directs consideration for promotion by Special Selection Board (SSB), applicant also requests that: 4. As a result of his selection for promotion to the grade of major, the AFBCMR further recommended approval of his request to be reinstated to active duty. If applicant would be selected to lieutenant colonel by an SSB, at that time his record would be scored against “benchmark” records and he would receive school candidacy if...
On the contrary, the issue here is whether any error has occurred within an internal Air Force promotion recommendation procedure (unlike Sanders, this applicant has not proven the existence of any error requiring correction) , wherein the final promotion recommendation (DP, Promote, Do Not Promote) cannot exist without the concurrence of the officers who authored and approved it. The attached reaccomplished PRF, reflecting a promotion recommendation of IIDefinitely Promote (DP) , be...
The Air Force officer promotion boards which considered his records for promotion were held in violation of statute, DoD Directive and Air Force regulations. DPPPA indicated that if the Board should grant the applicant’s request to receive SSB consideration by the CY93A central selection board, with a corrected Apr 93 OPR and CY93A (P0593A) PRF, the “corrected by” annotations on those reports (and any other corrected documents in his OSR) will be removed. In this respect, we note the...
AF | BCMR | CY1999 | BC-1995-00115
The Air Force officer promotion boards which considered his records for promotion were held in violation of statute, DoD Directive and Air Force regulations. DPPPA indicated that if the Board should grant the applicant’s request to receive SSB consideration by the CY93A central selection board, with a corrected Apr 93 OPR and CY93A (P0593A) PRF, the “corrected by” annotations on those reports (and any other corrected documents in his OSR) will be removed. In this respect, we note the...
_________________________________________________________________ AIR FORCE EVALUATION: The Selection Board Secretariat, HQ AFPC/DPPB, stated they disagree with counsel’s contention that the special selection board (SSB) process is unfair in that the use of benchmark records from the gray zone from the central board creates a higher standard for selection than that for the central board. ), he was otherwise competitive for promotion upon receiving the DP recommendation after his records...
Applicant’s Officer Selection Record (OSR) at the time the CY98B board convened did not contain a copy of the citation to accompany the award of the MSM (2OLC). A complete copy of the evaluation is attached at Exhibit C. _________________________________________________________________ APPLICANT'S REVIEW OF AIR FORCE EVALUATION: The applicant reviewed the Air Force evaluation and states that in reference to paragraph e, pertaining to the MSM 2OLC, if the only goal is to make board member...
No new evidence is provided for the Board to consider (see Exhibit C). AFPC/DPPPO recommends the application be time-barred. A promotion recommendation, be it a DP or anything else, is just that, a recommendation.
AF | BCMR | CY1999 | BC-1997-02055
_________________________________________________________________ AIR FORCE EVALUATION: The Report and Queries Section, AFPC/DPAIS1, indicated that a review of the applicant’s duty history revealed that the upgrade to “Chief, Electronic Combat Systems” was entered into the PDS with an effective date of 1 Aug 94. A complete copy of the DPAIS1 evaluation is at Exhibit C. The Selection Board Secretariat, AFPC/DPPB, reviewed this application and indicated that they disagreed with the...
_________________________________________________________________ AIR FORCE EVALUATION: The Report and Queries Section, AFPC/DPAIS1, indicated that a review of the applicant’s duty history revealed that the upgrade to “Chief, Electronic Combat Systems” was entered into the PDS with an effective date of 1 Aug 94. A complete copy of the DPAIS1 evaluation is at Exhibit C. The Selection Board Secretariat, AFPC/DPPB, reviewed this application and indicated that they disagreed with the...
Specifically, they note the statement “If the OER/OPR does not agree with the requested changes, a request must be submitted to correct the OER/OPR.” A complete copy of the Air Force evaluation is attached at Exhibit C. The Chief, Appeals and SSB Branch, AFPC/DPPPA, reviewed the application and states that the officer preselection brief (OPB) is sent to each eligible officer several months prior to a selection board. A complete copy of the Air Force evaluation is attached at Exhibit...